Kraków Town Hall

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Town Hall of Kraków
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Former Kraków Town Hall (ratusz) in an engraving from the late 1700s

The historic Town Hall of Kraków known as Ratusz in Polish, was constructed of brick and mortar for the first time in 1316 as one of its several versions built over the following centuries.[1] It was the city's administrative hub and seat of the great council, magistrate, and mayor from the 14th until the early 19th century. It was located in the centre of Main Square in the Kraków Old Town. It used to be one of Poland's oldest seats of civic government. The building was demolished in 1820. Only the Gothic tower remains, serving as prominent example of the Polish Gothic architecture locally.[1]

The building was situated next to the Kraków Cloth Hall in the south-western part of the Main Square. The construction and reconstruction periods stretched across centuries, with various parts of the building enlarged and remodelled. The Town Hall was demolished in 1820 under the Austrian Partition of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth when the Main Square was also rebuilt, with only the tower being saved following public protests among prominent Cracovians. The building housed various offices of the city. There are proposals to reconstruct it.[1]

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Kamil Janicki (2012), Co się stało z krakowskim ratuszem? (History of Kraków Town Hall) Ciekawostki turystyczne.

External links

Media related to Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. at Wikimedia Commons

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